Pulled these quotes from an article I sent you by Danah Boyd. I was thinking of placing one (one in red) on this page. What do you think?
As of late, we've been talking a lot about content streams, streams of information. This metaphor is powerful. The idea is that you're living inside the stream: adding to it, consuming it, redirecting it. The stream metaphor is about reaching flow. It's also about restructuring the ways in which information flows in modern society. *Think I like this one*
From blogging to social network sites to media sharing sites to sites that provide social streams, we are seeing countless ways in which a motivated individual can make their personal content available.
There were always folks willing to share their story but the Internet gave them a pulpit on which to stand.
In a networked era, there will be no destination, but rather a network of content and people.
Making content work in a networked era is going to be about living in the streams, consuming and producing alongside "customers." Consuming to understand, producing to be relevant.
Boyd, Danah. 2009. "Streams of Content, Limited Attention: The Flow of Information through Social Media." Web2.0 Expo. New York, NY: November 17. http://www.danah.org/papers/talks/Web2Expo.html
Welcome to The Stream
a starter kit to social media for art educators
Pulled these quotes from an article I sent you by Danah Boyd. I was thinking of placing one (one in red) on this page. What do you think?
As of late, we've been talking a lot about content streams, streams of information. This metaphor is powerful. The idea is that you're living inside the stream: adding to it, consuming it, redirecting it. The stream metaphor is about reaching flow. It's also about restructuring the ways in which information flows in modern society.
*Think I like this one*
From blogging to social network sites to media sharing sites to sites that provide social streams, we are seeing countless ways in which a motivated individual can make their personal content available.
There were always folks willing to share their story but the Internet gave them a pulpit on which to stand.
In a networked era, there will be no destination, but rather a network of content and people.
Making content work in a networked era is going to be about living in the streams, consuming and producing alongside "customers." Consuming to understand, producing to be relevant.
Boyd, Danah. 2009. "Streams of Content, Limited Attention: The Flow of Information through Social Media." Web2.0 Expo. New York, NY: November 17. http://www.danah.org/papers/talks/Web2Expo.html